HIGH RANKING GUATEMALAN POLICE OFFICERS ARRESTED
FOR CONSPIRACY TO IMPORT COCAINE INTO THE UNITED STATES

WASHINGTON, D.C. - Three high-level members of the Guatemalan Anti-Narcotics
Police (Servicio de Analisis e Informacion Antinarcoticos, or SAIA) have been
arrested on charges of conspiring to import and distribute cocaine in the
United States, Assistant Attorney General Alice S. Fisher of the Criminal
Division and Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) Administrator Karen Tandy
announced today.
The three senior SAIA officials are charged in an indictment returned in the
District of Columbia with conspiracy to import cocaine into the United States,
and with conspiracy to distribute cocaine, intending that it would be imported
into the United States., in violation of 21 U.S.C. 959, 960 and 963. The three
officials were arrested in the United States Tuesday after arriving in the
country from Guatemala.
The three defendants named in the indictment are Adan Castillo Lopez, a/k/a
“Adan Castillo Aguilar,” Jorge Aguilar Garcia, and Rubilio Orlando Palacios.
Castillo is Chief of the SAIA and the highest ranking anti-narcotics officer in
Guatemala. Aguilar is the second in command at SAIA. Orlando is also a member
of the same special police force and he was responsible for security sweeps at
Santo Tomas, a port on Guatemala’s Caribbean coast.
The indictment and arrests are the result of a four-month long investigation
by DEA agents in the United States and Central America into activities of the
three defendants. The defendants are scheduled to appear before a magistrate
judge at U.S. District Court in the District of Columbia at 1:45 p.m. ET
today.
“Those in law enforcement who would sell their badges to aid in the illegal
shipment of narcotics to the United States need to know that we are
aggressively investigating their activities,” said Assistant Attorney General
Fisher. “International borders will not stop our pursuit - U.S. law can be
brought to bear against them, no matter where they operate.”

“More than corrupting the public trust, these Guatemalan Police Officials have
been Trojan horses for the very addiction and devastation that they were
entrusted to prevent,” said DEA Administrator Tandy. “In the battle against
drugs, their actions are abhorrent - giving aid to an enemy they had sworn to
fight against. Finally, they will face the same justice they had long ago
abandoned.”
If convicted of the charged offenses, the defendants face a mandatory minimum
sentence of 10 years in prison.

The investigation that led to the arrests was conducted by the DEA, working
with the Criminal Division of the Department of Justice. The Government of
Guatemala assisted in the investigation.
An indictment contains only allegations. All defendants are presumed innocent
until and unless proven guilty in a court of law.